<p>Next year my school offers math analysis which basically covers pre calc 1/2 of the year and I guess ab other half cause the year after im elgible to take BC. Do you think its possible to take the ab exam after going through this course which im pretty sure covers alot of material on the ab exam? atleast self study it if its not possible?</p>
<p>Only foreseeable problem is that since the class isn’t AP, it may not have covered all the AB material by exam time (in my school, the school year ends some 3 weeks after APs, so that would be 3 weeks of material missed). If you can self-study that, then there should be no trouble.</p>
<p>Math analysis at my school is just precalc with limits and the power rule… I’m not sure what it’s like at your school. If you take BC you get credit for AB anyway.</p>
<p>Your situation might have been similar to my AP Euro. I was in a class that covered material on the test, but the class was not completely devoted to AP Euro. In fact, I don’t think we covered WWII and/or powt WWII until after the AP exam. I made sure to read the Princeton Review.</p>
<p>I think you should do this. Take the AB test. Make sure you do practice problems from collegeboard’s AP Calculus page, and read the Princeton Review’s book about AP Calculus. Whether or not your test goes well, you can take BC the next year. As long as you do well on BC, you shuold be fine. So let’s say you got a 3 on AB and a 5 on BC. You could just choose to report/send your BC score.</p>
<p>looks like thats what I will have to do. When do you think I should start reviewing for it?</p>
<p>Buy the Princeton Review and just start reviewing now. I’m not saying go crazy. You should still enjoy your summer.</p>
<p>Also, I made a notebook full of information from the Princeton Review book.</p>
<p>Buy the Princeton Review and just start reviewing now. I’m not saying go crazy. You should still enjoy your summer.</p>
<p>Also, I made a notebook full of information from the Princeton Review book.</p>